Jazmine Sullivan Toronto Concert — Next Date & Ticket Alerts
Jazmine Sullivan hasn't announced a Toronto date yet
Tour routing can change late, and Torontodates are often added after the first on-sale. Here's how to be first in line — plus everything worth checking while you wait.
Jazmine Sullivan in Toronto— Concert & City Guide
Toronto hosts Jazmine Sullivan at Massey Hall on Shuter Street for the most acoustically prized theater dates, History venue at 1663 Queen Street East in The Beach neighborhood for mid-sized concert hall nights, Roy Thomson Hall on Simcoe Street for symphonic-scale R&B-with-orchestra nights, and Scotiabank Arena above Union Station for arena-tier appearances. Massey Hall, the restored 1894 Sidney Rose Badgley-designed acoustic landmark at 178 Victoria Street that reopened in November 2021 after a four-year, $184 million CAD revitalization preserving the 1894 acoustic shell while adding modern infrastructure, has hosted some of the most acclaimed R&B, soul, jazz, and gospel headline runs since reopening — the room's acoustic warmth, intimate balcony sightlines, and the preserved Victorian-era acoustic geometry suit Sullivan's vocal staging in a way that few rooms anywhere can match. History venue, the 2,500-capacity Live Nation Canada and Drake-co-owned room at 1663 Queen Street East in The Beach neighborhood that opened in November 2021, has handled mid-sized concert hall R&B routings since opening. Roy Thomson Hall, the 2,630-seat 1982 Arthur Erickson-designed concert hall at 60 Simcoe Street that serves as the home of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, has hosted R&B-with-orchestra nights on past cycles. Scotiabank Arena, the 19,800-capacity Maple Leafs and Raptors home that sits directly above Union Station, handles the arena-tier appearances. Massey Hall sits at Queen station on the Yonge-University TTC line and is steps from Yonge-Dundas Square; Scotiabank Arena and Roy Thomson Hall are both walking distance from Union Station on TTC, GO Transit, and UP Express; History is reachable via the 501 Queen streetcar from Queen station. The Canadian R&B and soul audience pulls Sullivan's catalogue heavily — the Toronto R&B and soul ecosystem through Daniel Caesar, Charlotte Day Wilson, Jessie Reyez, dvsn, PARTYNEXTDOOR, and the broader Ontario circuit treats her as foundational influence on the contemporary scene, and the on-sale clears Massey Hall in single-digit minutes through the Massey Hall and Roy Thomson Hall website plus Ticketmaster.
Jazmine Sullivan in Toronto — FAQ
Is Jazmine Sullivan coming to Toronto in 2026?▼
How much are Jazmine Sullivan tickets in Toronto?▼
What venue will Jazmine Sullivan play in Toronto?▼
What time does the Jazmine Sullivan Toronto show start?▼
How do I get to the Toronto venue?▼
About Jazmine Sullivan
Jazmine Marie Sullivan was born April 9, 1987 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to a deeply musical household — her mother Pam Sullivan worked as a backup singer in the Philadelphia gospel and R&B circuits, and the family raised Jazmine inside the Pentecostal church tradition that shaped her vocal foundation. She grew up in the city's Strawberry Mansion neighborhood in North Philadelphia, attended the Philadelphia High School for Creative and Performing Arts (CAPA) — the same magnet school that produced Boyz II Men, Ahmir 'Questlove' Thompson, and Black Thought of The Roots — and started performing publicly as a child on the Philadelphia talent-show circuit. She was a regular at the historic Apollo Theater amateur night in Harlem during her early teen years, won the famously brutal Showtime at the Apollo audience repeatedly, and was signed to Jive Records as a teenager after years of demo work with Philadelphia producers including the Bell Biv DeVoe-affiliated production teams in the early 2000s. Her debut single Need U Bad, produced by Missy Elliott and built on a reggae one-drop sample, dropped in 2008 and became a top-40 Billboard Hot 100 hit; the follow-up Bust Your Windows — the now-canonical revenge anthem about smashing a cheating partner's car windows — landed at number 31 on the Hot 100 and cemented Sullivan as one of the most distinctive new voices in R&B. Fearless, released September 30, 2008 on J Records, debuted at number six on the Billboard 200 and earned five Grammy nominations at the 2009 ceremony including Best New Artist, Best R&B Album, Best Female R&B Vocal Performance for Need U Bad, Best R&B Song for Need U Bad, and Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance for Bust Your Windows. Love Me Back, released November 30, 2010 on J Records, produced Holding You Down (Goin' in Circles), Lions, Tigers & Bears, and 10 Seconds and continued the same five-Grammy-nomination critical reception. After Love Me Back, Sullivan publicly announced a hiatus in 2011, citing burnout and a desire to recalibrate her relationship to the music industry — she returned to Philadelphia, stepped back from public performance for roughly three years, and worked through what she has described in subsequent interviews as a period of personal and creative recovery from an industry that had pushed her too hard too young. Reality Show, released January 13, 2015 on RCA Records, was the comeback — a concept album threading reality-TV satire through ten songs that produced Mascara, Dumb featuring Meek Mill, Forever Don't Last, and the lead single Dumb. Reality Show earned Sullivan three further Grammy nominations and was widely cited as one of the strongest R&B albums of the 2010s. Heaux Tales, released January 8, 2021 on RCA Records, was the cultural inflection point — a 14-track project threading audio interview interludes from real women in Sullivan's life (her sisters, friends, and fellow artists) about love, sex, financial autonomy, and self-worth through her own songwriting, with features from H.E.R., Ari Lennox, Anderson .Paak, and Issa Rae. The album debuted at number four on the Billboard 200, produced Pick Up Your Feelings, Lost One, On It with Ari Lennox, Girl Like Me with H.E.R., and Bodies, won the Grammy for Best R&B Album at the 2022 ceremony, and was followed by Heaux Tales, Mo' Tales: The Deluxe in February 2022 carrying additional Tales and the new track Hurt Me So Good. Sullivan and country artist Eric Church performed The Star-Spangled Banner and America the Beautiful together at Super Bowl LV on February 7, 2021 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, with H.E.R. performing America the Beautiful in the same broadcast; the performance drew widespread praise for Sullivan's vocal control across the broadcast's pre-game window. Sullivan holds twelve career Grammy nominations across the Fearless, Love Me Back, Reality Show, and Heaux Tales cycles, with the 2022 Best R&B Album win for Heaux Tales as the headline. She has been publicly engaged in advocacy work around women's autonomy, mental health, and Black women's representation in R&B, and her catalogue is widely cited by younger R&B artists — Summer Walker, Ari Lennox, Coco Jones, Muni Long, Tyla — as a foundational influence on the genre's contemporary direction.
